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Comment at bottom of page.

| HOUSE VOTES TO
LIMIT IRAQ BURN PITS
"We should not continue to recklessly use burn pits to dispose of
hazardous waste across Iraq and Afghanistan."
NOTE from Larry Scott, VA
Watchdog dot Org ... Click on link for complete information on
Iraq War Toxins including
burn pits and hexavalent chromium.
-------------------------
WASHINGTON (CNN) — The House passed a measure Thursday that would
set a 12-month limit on the military's use of controversial "burn
pits" to dispose of potentially hazardous materials on bases
overseas.
The pits, used to burn all matters of waste, have been
controversial since troops complained of various health problems
from inhaling fumes.
The measure, sponsored by Reps. Tim Bishop, D-New York, and Carol
Shea-Porter, D-New Hampshire, would prohibit the use of the pits
for burning medical and hazardous waste, including plastic
bottles, during operations lasting longer than 12 months.
"We should not continue to recklessly use burn pits to dispose of
hazardous waste across Iraq and Afghanistan," Bishop said in a
statement. "Our troops should be free to focus on fighting the
enemy without worrying how their lives may be further endangered
by breathing in toxic air from their own bases."
Emissions from burn pits have been a concern for troops,
especially those who served at Balad Air Force Base in Iraq. Many
of the soldiers who went through Balad since the beginning of the
war had become used to "Iraqi crud," as they dubbed the symptom of
excessive coughing and black phlegm. Soldiers complained of
respiratory problems and skin infections, and in some cases
believed they developed leukemia and tumors from the exposure.
The
pits at Balad were at one point open and burning everything from
plastics and food to medical waste, sometimes with jet fuel used
as an accelerant. In the later years, incinerators were installed
at Balad but many other bases in Iraq and Afghanistan still use
the pits without incinerators to burn garbage.
The military said last year that smoke from the Balad pit exposed
troops to toxic emissions, including low levels of cancer-causing
dioxins. However, its tests indicated there is no long-term
danger, officials said.
The study of air samples at Balad by the U.S. Army Center for
Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM) was conducted
after a number of concerns about the toxic nature of the pervasive
smoke from the incineration pits.
The air samples were collected between January and April of 2007.
But the report admitted that it cannot account for everything
burned in the pit. An additional 107 samples were collected in
October and November of 2007. The results of those tests will be
released early in 2009.
Many in the veterans community remain unconvinced that the burn
pits were harmless. A database started by the group Disabled
American Veterans includes more than 400 veterans who believe they
had significant exposure to the pits and have since contracted
cancer, or developed pulmonary problems, skin lesions and allergy
symptoms.
The Senate has yet to vote on the measure.
-------------------------
TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Iraq, Afghanistan, burn pits, contamination |

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posted by Larry Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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